Sign up for our mailing list. Signing up for our email list from our website requires that your browser support Javascript and have it enabled, which doesn't appear to be the case for your browser. Alternatively, you can use email or phone to complete the process by contacting Janie Guion, MPO staff, at jguion@ctps.org or 857.702.3658.

The process begins with the community inviting a team of transportation planners to discuss the issues, and ends with the planners recommending solutions to address the concerns. Since the program’s inception, more than 15 communities have received recommendations ranging from traffic calming and intersection redesign to pedestrian circulation and bicycle accommodation.

For more information, please contact Mark Abbott, MPO Staff, at 857.702.3641 or mabbott@ctps.org.

The MPO offers free workshops to identify local strategies for making our communities better places to live by educating the public on the concepts of livability and the role that transportation plays in achieving it. MPO staff plan the event with local organizers, facilitate community consideration of how design influences livability, and encourage discussion of how livability concepts may be incorporated into the host community. Workshops are tailored to the needs or goals of the selected community.

For more information, please contact Casey Claude, MPO Staff, at 857.702.3707 or cclaude@ctps.org.

Interested in growing ridership, optimizing routes, and making service more cost-effective? Whether you’re a regional transit authority, transportation management association, Metropolitan Area Planning Council subregion, or a municipality, MPO staff will help you improve the transit service that you fund or operate.

For more information, please contact Annette Demchur, MPO Staff, at 857.702.3650 or ademchur@ctps.org.

Apply for our programs by completing the form below, or by contacting the individuals cited above:

Name

Title

City/Town

Program

Description

Brief description of the location and issue(s) that you would like us to examine